Natural Awareness: A Mindfulness Workshop for Everyone

Human beings have the ability to direct attention. With minimal effort, right now, you can place your attention on the toes of your left foot. You can feel the sensations in the back of your neck.

You can open awareness to the thoughts flickering through your mind. This natural ability, cultivated, is called mindfulness. When people cultivate mindfulness, good things happen. Calm develops. Rumination decreases. Stress responses ease. Working memory improves. Focus increases. Love grows. Relationships improve. And much more.

In this half-day workshop, participants will learn the basics of mindfulness meditation. During periods of guided practice and mindful group activities, we'll build a foundation to help folks use these time-honored practices to improve the quality of their daily lives. Come join us!

In this mindfulness workshop participants will:

Learn essential mindfulness techniques and heart practices

Practice mindful sitting, walking, movement, listening, and speaking

Develop skills to reduce emotional reactivity

Reduce overwhelm and burnout

Discuss real-life examples to find real-life solutions

Be welcomed in a warm and inviting atmosphere

This workshop is open to people of all faiths, persuasions, races, ethnicities, nationalities, ages, resources, sexual orientations, gender orientations, and ranges of ability.

*Please bring your yoga mat and a meditation cushion if you have one.For more info click here.

About Devon and Craig Hase

Devon and Craig have studied with some of the great meditation teachers of our time. When they are not in months-long retreat, they teach mindfulness widely in the United States and Europe.

Joseph Goldstein, the co-founder of Insight Meditation Society and author of acclaimed works on mindfulness, says of them, "Devon and Craig are deeply experienced practitioners, with a strong dedication to their own meditation journey. They have immersed themselves for many years in long intensive practice, and I highly recommend their mindfulness teaching."